Journalist's Notebook

Times Square Bombing Suspect Pleads Guilty

The Times Square car bomb suspect, Faisal Shahzad, pleaded guilty on the 10 terrorism and weapons charges handed down by a federal grand jury.

The Pakistan-born U.S. citizen appeared defiant in court Monday as he entered his plea, warning “we will be attacking the U.S.” unless the military “leaves Muslim lands alone,” according to court documents.

Shahzad was born in Pakistan and moved to the United States when he was 18. The married father of two, trained in the United States as a financial analyst, was indicted for receiving explosives training in Pakistan during a five-week trip to Warziristan.

Court document show Shahzad received $5,000 in cash in late February from an accused Pakistani co-conspirator. That same man allegedly ordered $7,000 more be paid to Shahzad on April 10th.

Shahzad is scheduled to be sentenced October 5. Many of his charges each carry life sentences.

Judge Challenges Shahzad In Court

Shahzad gave a detailed account of what happened the night he tried to detonate an SUV full of explosives in Times Square May 1st. He

Yahoo! News Photo

said he chose a warm Saturday night because there would be more people he could kill.

Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum questioned the would-be car bomber after he called the bombing attempt retaliation against the U.S. and other countries that “attacked the Muslim lands.”

Cedarbaum interrupted, “But not the people who were walking in Times Square that night. Did you look around to see who they were?”

Shahzad replied, “Well, the people select the government,” Shahzad said. “We consider them all the same.”

The judge also tried to determine if Shahzad constructed the bomb himself.

He calmly replied, “One has to understand where I’m coming from.” He continued, “I consider myself a Muslim soldier,” telling the judge he built the bomb “all by myself.”

He continued to explain that he waited up to five minutes after he lit the fuse waiting for the bomb to go off.

“I was waiting to hear a sound but I didn’t hear a sound,” Shahzad told the court. “So I walked to Grand Central and went home,” he said.

Yahoo! News Photo

Shahzad’s defiant tone didn’t end there. He went on to say: “I am part of the answer to the U.S. terrorizing the Muslim nations and the Muslim people. And, on behalf of that, I’m avenging the attack. Living in the United States, Americans only care about their own people, but they don’t care about the people elsewhere in the world when they die.”

Guilty Plea Meant To Send Message Of Terror

During a court hearing that was far routine, Shahzad says he wanted “to plead guilty and 100 times more,” warning “we will be attacking U.S.” if President Obama doesn’t pull the military out of Afghanistan and Iraq.

Early December Cold Snap Grips the Nation

Frigid weather is gripping much of the country as far south as Florida.

Fort Lauderdale hit a record low temperature for this date (Tuesday) at 40 degrees. The old record was 42 set in 1841.

The National Weather Service issued hard freeze warnings Tuesday night into Wednesday morning for much of Florida with freeze advisories as far south as Hollywood.

Cold and snow have hit parts of North Carolina, West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Vermont. Winter weather advisories are in effect for parts of those states with more snow expected.

IN Voters to Decide Whether Prop. Tax Caps Are Put In Constitution

David Shepherd - Nov. 2

Question 1 on the ballot in Indiana asks voters if they support making Property Tax Cap laws part of the state constitution.

Lawmakers expect the proposal to pass, but Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett says the caps are bad for cities who are struggling with the lack of revenue.

The Mayor says more cuts must be made to make up for the loss in revenue from the property tax caps.
Over the past two years, the caps have forced the city to cut more than $5.5-million.

Terre Haute is the 7th hardest hit city in the state when it comes to the caps' effects.

"It all sounds good. Everybody wants their taxes to go down," says Bennett. "But people don't realize that the translation is, you pay less, there's less service and people are not going to be happy with that in future years. I've not seen a lot of resistance to it out there and I don't think people really understand the true impact and cities and towns are the hardest hit because you can't raise any new revenue."

One city service that won't be cut this year is the city's leaf pick-up.

Last year, city leaders thought they wouldn't be able to afford to do it this year.

Wednesday, the Mayor said they'll make one pass to pick up the leaves if they are raked out to the curb.
Republic will also continue to collect bagged leaves.

The Mayor doesn't know if the city will be able to afford the program next year.

VA Man Accused of Plot to Bomb DC Metro

David Shepherd - Oct. 27

A Virginia man, born in Pakistan, was arrested Wednesday for allegedly casing Washington area Metro stations to possibly carry out a bomb plot on the Nation’s Capitol, police sources said.

34-year-old Farooque Ahmed is accused of approaching government employees, he thought were al-Qaida operatives, to join the so called bomb plot on Washington’s Metro.

NBC News has learned the ruse was conducted over the past six months and it allegedly involved Ahmed handing over video of northern Virginia subway stations to the men the thought were connected to the terror group.

Sources say he suggested using rolling suitcases, instead of backpacks, to kill as many people as possible.
Investigators also tell NBC Farooque offered to donate money to al-Qaida.

The FBI says the public was never in danger since agents knew what Ahmed was up to. They say he was monitored throughout the entire course of the investigation.

Hundreds Feared Dead in Mexican Mudslide

FROM MSNBC: Hundreds of people were buried in their homes early Tuesday after a rain-soaked mountainside gave way in southwestern Mexico, officials said.

Donato Vargas, an official in Santa Maria Tlahuitoltepec reached by phone, said 500 people were missing and that 300 homes were buried after the slide around 4 a.m. local time.

"We were all sleeping and all I heard was a loud noise and when I left the house I saw that the hill had fallen," Vargas said.

"It has been difficult informing authorities because the roads are very bad and there isn't a good signal for our phone," Vargas said shortly before the call dropped.

Reached by the news agency AFP, Vargas added that "we fear that those missing are buried inside their homes because we've already searched nearby areas."

Mr. Colbert Goes to Washington (But Did Congress Get the Joke?)

David Shepherd - Sept. 24

It was suppose to be “lol” funny! But I’m not sure members of Congress got the joke.
Comedy Central star Stephen Colbert appeared on Capitol Hill today as a witness on the issue of migrant farm work.

The funnyman was invited to speak to the Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Refugees and Border Security by the co-chair

“I certainly hope that my star power can bump this hearing all the way up to C-SPAN One,” Colbert told members of the subcommittee.

Stephen Colbert’s character comes across as a right-wing activist, ready to join the Republicans at any moment (while not confirmed, most think it’s just an act).

“We have to do something” about the plight of farm workers “because I am not going back out there,” Colbert jabbed.

“At this point, I break into a cold sweat at the sight of a salad bar,” he said.

It’s obvious his comments were meant to be taken light-heartedly by the elected officials but, as TV cameras showed glimpses of the committee members, not many seemed amused.

Some chuckled, others laughed out loud, but the majority rolled their eyes and sat expressionless as Colbert ranted on several issues including immigration and the economy.

Archives

Email Subscription

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1 other follower

My News Blog

Thank you for checking out my blog. Feel free to browse, comment and participate in my Sound-Off Web Polls.

The information in these stories come from several sources from network news to my own sources in Indiana, Washington D.C. and elsewhere.

While many other blogs give the author's point of view on a variety of topics, it's my goal to present the information in an impartial fashion so you, the reader, can form opinions for yourselves.

I'm a firm believer in the old-fashioned style of news where the accurate information is the highlight, not the "If it bleeds, it leads" philosophy.

Again, thank you for checking out the blog and enjoy! I'd love to hear from you. If you have story ideas or ways I can improve the blog, feel free to shoot me an e-mail at dshepherd@wtwo.com.

Search for:

Advertisements

David Shepherd Wins “Best in General News” Award

I was recently honored to win a Spectrum Award for Best in General News by the Indiana Broadcasters Association for a story I did for NBC 2 WTWO-TV in Terre Haute.

This is my first award from the Broadcasters Association.

I’d like to thank my photographer, Josh Lum, for shooting and editing the piece. Without his stellar work, this award would not have been possible.

Democrats Stump For Last Minute Votes

David Shepherd - Nov. 2

Democratic candidates for state office were in Terre Haute Friday stumping for last minute votes.

The candidates for State Treasurer, Secretary of State, and State Auditor greeted supporters.

As the election enters the home stretch, the democrats know they have ground to make up if they want to pull out a win on Tuesday.

Democratic Senate candidate Brad Ellsworth also made a stop in the Valley Friday.

Ellsworth spoke to a group of ISU students at Rhodes Hall.

The Senate hopeful discussed a variety of issues including Cap and Trade and the economy.

Ellsworth says his campaign is in full gear leading up to Tuesday’s election.

"It's going really well. I just left Indianapolis. I was in a room full of people; volunteers that were stuffing walking bags and making phone calls and that's really what it's down to now, is the ground game of who gets the votes out."

President’s Approval Drops to All-Time Low

David Shepherd - Sept. 24

Democrats are starting to smell blood in the water as new polling shows President Barrack Obama’s approval rating dropping to record lows.

Only 42 percent of Americans approve of President Barrack Obama’s job performance, according to a new CNN / Opinion Research Corporation poll. The poll shows 54 percent of Americans are not satisfied with the administration’s performance.

A sluggish economy and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have taken support for Mr. Obama to an all-time low.

Other democrats, some who are running in November’s mid-term elections, aren’t doing much better.
Congressional Democrats face a nine-point deficit when those polled were asked which party they’ll support in November.

Some political analysts say Republicans have a serious shot at picking up the 39 seats needed to re-take control of the House of Representatives (currently held by the Democrats).

Those Democrats may not be asking the President to stump for them any time soon. Only 37 percent of likely voters say they are more likely to vote for a candidate backed by Mr. Obama.

Nearly half of those polled said they’d likely choose a candidate supported by the Tea Party movement, an ultra-conservative base that’s gained growing support in recent months.

The poll also shows the majority of Americans believe Republicans, in general, are more engaged and excited about voting than their Democratic counterparts.

President Calls Ahmadinejad’s Comments “Offensive and Hateful”

David Shepherd - Sept. 24

President Obama called Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s comments to the U.N. on Thursday “offensive and hateful.”

"Well, it was offensive. It was hateful," Obama said in part of an interview with BBC Persian released by the White House.

"And particularly for him to make the statement here in Manhattan, just a little north of ground zero, where families lost their loved ones -- people of all faiths, all ethnicities who see this as the seminal tragedy of this generation -- for him to make a statement like that was inexcusable," Obama said.

During Thursday’s U.N. address, Ahmadinejad blamed the United States for the terror attacks on September 11, 2001, saying the U.S. was behind it.

I Iranian President’s remarks caused delegates from the United States, Europe and other countries to walk out of the U.N. General Assembly in the middle of his speech.

counterpart Friday for what he called offensive and hateful remarks about the September 11 attacks.